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How to choose a motherboard?


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Guest Don Phillipson
Posted

Win98SE meets very nearly all current needs (inc. EMACS

for DOS and its DOS printer) and

some of my apps are not fully compatible with XP

(e.g. Quattro v.8 and Paradox v.7)

and I have had 3 hardware breakdowns (dead sound-on-

board circuit and two power supplies) -- so I must plan to

replace with something equally functional the ASUS P4P800S

motherboard, running Win98SE on a Pentium 4 2.8 GHz and

512 Mb RAM.

 

1. How do I evaluate motherboards for functionality

and durability?

2. Drives: most MBs now seem to offer only two

or three card slots. My (year 2004) ASUS has six

populated by video card, modem, TV receiver, audio

card, etc. and I should like to have as many, so as

to use the Audigy sound card (2 cards) etc.

2b. I have been assured that MBs set up for SATA

drives can also connect IDE drives.

 

--

Don Phillipson

Carlsbad Springs

(Ottawa, Canada)

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Guest Bob Harris
Posted

Re: How to choose a motherboard?

 

Functionality? Do you mean whether they support win98? If that is the

question, then go to the manufacture's support website and see whether they

offer downloadable drivers for win98. If all they talk about is XP or

Vista, then you have your answer: No.

 

Durability? I have seen a lot of MB tests in magzines and on the web, but

none about durability. Pick a name brand and hope for the best.

 

Slots on modern motherboards? First, do not look at a really new

motherboard, since it probably will not support win98 anyways. Look for an

older model with many PCI slots, maybe one AGP slot for a video card. Avoid

PCI-X slots, as they are probably too new for win98 to use. An older model

motherboard (plus CPU and RAM) will be cheaper, too.

 

SATA? That is even newer than XP, so I do not know about win98. Again,

check for drivers, since SATA is built into the motherboard. Note that I

can run DOS (from a floppy) and see my SATA hard drives, but running win98

in windows mode may be something else. Some flavors of free LINUX also runs

OK with my SATA hard drives.

 

IDE (or parallel ATA) is becoming less popular. If a motherboard has many

SATA controllers, it may have fewer IDE controllers. However, you can

always add IDE controllers via a PCI add-in card, if you have an available

PCI slot.

 

"Don Phillipson" <e925@SPAMBLOCK.ncf.ca> wrote in message

news:OGq7TSIgIHA.5996@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...

> Win98SE meets very nearly all current needs (inc. EMACS

> for DOS and its DOS printer) and

> some of my apps are not fully compatible with XP

> (e.g. Quattro v.8 and Paradox v.7)

> and I have had 3 hardware breakdowns (dead sound-on-

> board circuit and two power supplies) -- so I must plan to

> replace with something equally functional the ASUS P4P800S

> motherboard, running Win98SE on a Pentium 4 2.8 GHz and

> 512 Mb RAM.

>

> 1. How do I evaluate motherboards for functionality

> and durability?

> 2. Drives: most MBs now seem to offer only two

> or three card slots. My (year 2004) ASUS has six

> populated by video card, modem, TV receiver, audio

> card, etc. and I should like to have as many, so as

> to use the Audigy sound card (2 cards) etc.

> 2b. I have been assured that MBs set up for SATA

> drives can also connect IDE drives.

>

> --

> Don Phillipson

> Carlsbad Springs

> (Ottawa, Canada)

>

>

>

Guest philo
Posted

Re: How to choose a motherboard?

 

 

"Don Phillipson" <e925@SPAMBLOCK.ncf.ca> wrote in message

news:OGq7TSIgIHA.5996@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...

> Win98SE meets very nearly all current needs (inc. EMACS

> for DOS and its DOS printer) and

> some of my apps are not fully compatible with XP

> (e.g. Quattro v.8 and Paradox v.7)

> and I have had 3 hardware breakdowns (dead sound-on-

> board circuit and two power supplies) -- so I must plan to

> replace with something equally functional the ASUS P4P800S

> motherboard, running Win98SE on a Pentium 4 2.8 GHz and

> 512 Mb RAM.

>

> 1. How do I evaluate motherboards for functionality

> and durability?

> 2. Drives: most MBs now seem to offer only two

> or three card slots. My (year 2004) ASUS has six

> populated by video card, modem, TV receiver, audio

> card, etc. and I should like to have as many, so as

> to use the Audigy sound card (2 cards) etc.

> 2b. I have been assured that MBs set up for SATA

> drives can also connect IDE drives.

>

 

 

Very doubful if you could get chipset drivers for the newer boards...

why not grab a few older boards from ebay?

Guest 98 Guy
Posted

Re: How to choose a motherboard?

 

Don Phillipson wrote:

> 1. How do I evaluate motherboards for functionality and durability?

 

I take it you are asking how to evaluate functionality in terms of

Windows-98se. The answer (for a new motherboard) is to look for a

board with a VIA chipset. You want a motherboard that has chipset

support (drivers) for Windows 98.

 

Evaluation in terms of durability is not straightforward. Some

manufacturers (like Asus) have web-based support forums where you can

read how some motherboards have known issues. There are

usenet-specific motherboard groups as well.

> 2. Drives: most MBs now seem to offer only two or three card

> slots. My (year 2004) ASUS has six populated by video card,

> modem, TV receiver, audio card, etc. and I should like to have

> as many, so as to use the Audigy sound card (2 cards) etc.

 

Your TV receiver card will become useless to you once NTSC

broadcasting is replaced by Hi-def. For over-the-air terrestrial

broadcasting, that will happen in the US in less than a year, and in 2

to 3 years in Canada. I'm not sure about the phase-out of NTSC on

cable TV.

 

Are you saying that you have 2 sound card? Why?

 

Do you really still use dial-up?

 

I recommend this board:

 

http://www.asrock.com/mb/overview.asp?Model=4COREDUAL-VSTA

 

It has 4 pci slots and it's one of a very few boards that still has

AGP. Win-98 will function on it, with all components except the audio

portion (there are no win-98 HD-audio drivers for any motherboard that

I'm aware of).

 

Win-98 functions just fine with SATA drives BTW.

> 2b. I have been assured that MBs set up for SATA

> drives can also connect IDE drives.

 

Yes they can, assuming they have 40-pin IDE (aka PATA) connectors on

the board. There may very well be some new motherboards today that

don't have connectors for IDE drives, but I'd think it's rare.

 

If you are going to buy a new hard drive to go along with a new

motherboard, I'd choose SATA anyways (there are some good reasons to

do so - especially for Windows 98).

 

Read the following for more information:

 

http://www.msfn.org/board/Modern-motherboards-working-Windows-98-t97588.html

 

http://www.msfn.org/board/Compatible-Hardware-Windows-9x-t107001.html

  • 2 weeks later...
Guest Don Phillipson
Posted

Re: How to choose a motherboard?

 

"98 Guy" <98@Guy.com> wrote in message news:47D372CB.63AA8B62@Guy.com...

> > 1. How do I evaluate motherboards for functionality and durability?

>

> > 2. Drives: most MBs now seem to offer only two or three card

> > slots. My (year 2004) ASUS has six populated by video card,

> > modem, TV receiver, audio card, etc. and I should like to have

> > as many, so as to use the Audigy sound card (2 cards) etc.

>

> Are you saying that you have 2 sound card? Why?

 

Thanks for helpful comments.

Current problems seem now solved: (were annoying in

Dec.-Jan. when both UPS and power supply died

simultaneously, first replacement UPS battery was

itself faulty, then the brand-new power supply failed

in less than 6 weeks. Free replacements hardly

compensated for weeks of puzzlement. . .

 

The Sound Blaster Audigy Platinum EX is an elaborate kit

with extra components I do not need (e.g. TV remote control)

and some I simply do not understand e.g. the "External

Sound Blaster Audigy Drive." This unit was bought when the

MB audio circuitry failed and I had to add a sound card. I

wanted highest possible fidelity under Win98SE (for music

recording and editing) and this seemed the only truly hi-fi system

with Win98 drivers. It has an "extension card" that slots

next to the audio card.

http://193.95.171.84/SRVS/CGI-BIN/WEBCGI.EXE/,/?St=410,E=0000000000341948178,K=4679,Sxi=12,Case=obj(2596),Kb=ww_english_add,VARSET=ws:http://us.creative.com/

> Do you really still use dial-up?

 

1. No cable at this address.

2. The cell phone/cable TV/ISP company did not know

wireless Internet service was available just here until

badgered by both municipal politicians and mysellf.

3. Wireless service was in 2006 notoriously faulty,

e.g. would simply be unavailable at least one day

every month. No one ever knew why. Service now is

satisfactory but speed varies hugely, from 0.5 to 10

Mb. per min.

4. My spouse's private PC was in 2006 a Pentium2

without an ethernet card, i.e. connected only dial-up

3b. which was useful for urgent email when wireless

high speed failed.

 

My spouse's PC now is WinXP (acquired because we

needed to display a CD of medical scans written with

XML code) that enables both Ethernet and (with a

wireless card) network connections with the Win98

PC elsewhere; (and we have also reanimated a WinXP

laptop discarded by a friend; at this rural location mains

electricity fails a couple of times a year, usually for less

than 12 hours but we need to feel prepared.)

> I recommend this board:

 

Recommendations copied with thanks for future use.

--

Don Phillipson

Carlsbad Springs

(Ottawa, Canada)


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